What are you reading now?

I usually read nonfiction. Most of my books I download onto a kindle app, or listen via audible. The audiobooks are in the background when I work online, and when driving. Sometimes at bedtime I usually listen 2 or 3 times, since I miss parts when I am doing other tasks.

For some reason I'm starting to read fiction again.

Most recent nonfiction:

Dugard's Into Africa. The Epic Adventures of Stanley and Livingston. Mid 1800s, exploration of Africa was one of the last frontiers for Europeans. Slavery was depleting the continent, to the East (Arabs) and to the West (Americas). The West was fascinated by stories of Africa, and the source of the Nile was almost a Holy Grail. The explorers were imperfect by modern standards - as are most modern people - but had incredible experiences, dedication, failure, triumph, disease, injury, hardship, degradation, pride, and more. I've previously read other books about the exploitation of Africa - most notably, the enslavement and genocide of millions of people in the Congo (Hochschild's King Leopold's Ghost) - a story that includes Stanley's role in that atrocity. In Into Africa, the tales of adventure and exploration are well told, the psychologies of the main characters are described, and the context is illuminated. Stanley reinvented himself as much as a modern politician, and Livingston was driven by religion, lust, science, and adventure.

Most recent fiction:

I just finished James Lee Burke's "The Tin Roof Blowdown", a story of crime during and following the Katrina disaster in New Orleans. The story was complicated, with multiple bad guy characters and flawed good guys. I like stories about the South, and New Orleans, and enjoyed this one enough that I bought another book in Burke's series.

Currently reading Walter Mosely "Devil in a Blue Dress", another crime story. This time, set in 1940s post war Watts in Los Angeles. To me, this has a noir feel, and I'm enjoying it thoroughly.

Replies to This Discussion

He treats the magic as little more than sensationalistic embellishments to loosely translated stories over time. For instance, it is far more likely to him that Jesus was just a good leader than a magician. When hundreds of followers set out to follow Jesus to hear him speak, it's highly unlikely that every one of them left their homes with their families, yet didn't bring food with them for the journey. The crowd got hungry, some didn't come prepared, and Jesus came up with the bright idea to collect all the food onto one table and feed all the people from it. That story eventually morphed into Jesus feeding the multitudes by multiplying fish and bread.

Personally, I'm not even convinced that Jesus was a real person in history, but I like hearing sensible explanations for the obtuse bullshit that is derived from ancient dogma.

That's kinda what Jesus does in Christopher Moore's awesome book 'Lamb', although he goes by the name Joshua in that book. One of my all time favorite books. It's basically a novel that loosely parallels the life and times of Jesus, as narrated by his best friend Biff. It's hysterical.

I hate long commutes, commercials, and having shitty songs stuck in my head - but I love the library! My commute sucks, but free audiobooks make it bearable. I would recommend one of Bart's books, but seeing as he has authored about 30 of them, it would be better to review them and find one that sounds interesting to you, if that topic interests you.

Have you read the old Dale Carnegie book "How to make friends snd influence prople". That had a big effect on me. nInitially I thought from the title it was manipulative, but when I read it, it was sincere. I changed how I interacted with others, snd overcame some of the lack of social skill from my upbringing. The Survivor Personality was also influential for me, ans 7 habits of highly effective people.